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9-letter words containing d

  • -barreled — -barreled combines with adjectives to form adjectives that describe a gun which has a barrel or barrels of the specified type.
  • -bottomed — -bottomed can be added to adjectives or nouns to form adjectives that indicate what kind of bottom an object or person has.
  • -breasted — having breasts of the size, shape, etc specified
  • -centered — -centered can be added to adjectives and nouns to indicate what kind of a center something has.
  • -cornered — having corners of a particular shape or type or having a particular number of corners
  • -educated — -educated combines with nouns and adjectives to form adjectives indicating where someone was educated.
  • -favoured — having an appearance (as specified)
  • -flavored — -flavored is used after nouns such as strawberry and chocolate to indicate that a food or drink is flavored with strawberry or chocolate.
  • -friendly — -friendly combines with nouns to form adjectives which describe things that are not harmful to the specified part of the natural world.
  • -humoured — having a state of mind, temper, or mood as specified
  • -impaired — You use -impaired in adjectives where you are describing someone with a particular disability. For example, someone who is hearing-impaired has a disability affecting their hearing, and someone who is visually-impaired has a disability affecting their sight.
  • -oriented — -oriented is added to nouns and adverbs to form adjectives which describe what someone or something is mainly interested in or concerned with.
  • -sounding — -sounding combines with adjectives to indicate a quality that a word, phrase, or name seems to have.
  • -spirited — -spirited combines with adjectives to describe a person's character, attitude, or behaviour. For example, a mean-spirited person behaves in a way that is unkind to other people; a free-spirited person behaves freely and does as they please.
  • -stamened — having a specified number or type of stamens
  • -statured — having a certain kind of stature
  • -storeyed — -storeyed means the same as -storey.
  • -textured — having a surface of the specified kind
  • -throated — having a (specified kind of) throat
  • -year-old — -year-old combines with numbers to describe the age of people or things.
  • a bad lot — an unpleasant or disreputable person
  • a la mode — A dessert à la mode is served with ice cream.
  • a load of — You can use a load of to refer to people or things which you do not like. For example, if you say that something is a load of rubbish, you are emphasizing that you think it is no good at all or not true at all.
  • a-student — An A-student is a student who regularly receives the highest grades for his or her work.
  • aardvarks — Plural form of aardvark.
  • abandoned — An abandoned place or building is no longer used or occupied.
  • abandonee — a person to whom something is formally relinquished, esp an insurer having the right to salvage a wreck
  • abandoner — a person or thing that abandons
  • abashedly — ashamed or embarrassed; disconcerted: My clumsiness left me abashed.
  • abd allah — 1846–99, Sudanese leader; he led the uprising against the Egyptian government of Sudan; defeated by Kitchener in 1898
  • abdicable — to renounce or relinquish a throne, right, power, claim, responsibility, or the like, especially in a formal manner: The aging founder of the firm decided to abdicate.
  • abdicated — Simple past tense and past participle of abdicate.
  • abdicates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of abdicate.
  • abdicator — to renounce or relinquish a throne, right, power, claim, responsibility, or the like, especially in a formal manner: The aging founder of the firm decided to abdicate.
  • abdominal — Abdominal is used to describe something that is situated in the abdomen or forms part of it.
  • abductees — Plural form of abductee.
  • abducting — Present participle of abduct.
  • abduction — the act of taking someone away by force or cunning; kidnapping
  • abductive — (anatomy) Related or pertaining to abductor muscles and their movement. (Mid 19th century.).
  • abductors — Plural form of abductor.
  • abecedary — abecedarian.
  • abideable — Capable of being abided.
  • abidingly — In an abiding manner; permanently. (First attested around 1350 to 1470.).
  • abnegated — Simple past tense and past participle of abnegate.
  • aboardage — collision between two vessels meeting side-on or at a slight angle.
  • abodement — a sign that something good or bad is about to happen
  • abolished — Formally put an end to (a system, practice, or institution).
  • abondance — (card games) Alternative form of abundance.
  • aboudikro — the wood of a sapele.
  • aboundant — Obsolete spelling of abundant (14th–17th centuries).

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with letter D. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains in D to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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